PhD, MBchB, MRCOG, MSc
Reader
- About
-
- Email Address
- mairead.black@abdn.ac.uk
- Telephone Number
- +44 (0)1224 438437
- Office Address
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Room 4, second floor, AB252ZD Royal Aberdeen Maternity Hospital
Foresterhill Campus
Foresterhill
AB25 2ZL
- School/Department
- School of Medicine, Medical Sciences and Nutrition
Biography
Career goals:
Addressing inequalities in maternity care
Normalising conversations about whether to plan vaginal or caesarean birth
Dr Black is a clinical academic obstetrician who aims to improve women's childbirth experiences and outcomes. She provides leadership in the advance and delivery of maternity care, pushing high-quality care and support for pregnant women up the research and clinical agenda.
Dr Black's research addresses how maternity care can be improved to ensure informed decision-making and to reduce inequalities in physical and psychological health after birth. Current projects include decision aid development to support birth mode planning, understanding and improving maternity care for those with multiple long-term conditions and for refugees and those seeking asylum. She researches induction of labour, including current practice and outcomes, and the role of statistical models to predict induction of labour success.
Dr Black has experience in qualitative research, synthesis of qualitative and quantitative data, epidemiology using multiple linked datasets, health services research and consensus methods. Her high impact papers to date relate to offspring health outcomes following planned caesarean birth and pharmacoepidemiology of multiple medication use in pregnancy.
Dr Black utilises evidence synthesis, primary qualitative research, multi-stakeholder consensus-building, and engagement with software companies to make care safer and more accessible.
Dr Black is an honorary consultant obstetrician at Aberdeen Maternity Hospital with leadership roles in labour ward, quality, risk and governance. She was a member of the NICE Antenatal Care guideline committee from 2018 to 2021. She is a member of an NHS England working group developing decision aids for maternity care.
Dr Black is academic lead for the Aberdeen Maternity and Neonatal Databank and co-leads the Aberdeen Clinical Academic Training pathway.
Qualifications
- MSc Public Health and Health Services Research2013 - University of Aberdeen
- PhD Reproductive Biology2016 - University of Aberdeen
- MBchB Medicine and Surgery2004 - University of Glasgow
- MRCOG Obstetrics and Gynaecology2009 - Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists
Memberships and Affiliations
- Internal Memberships
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Aberdeen Maternity and Neonatal Databank academic lead (2023-present)
Institute of Applied Health Sciences equality, diversity and inclusion (EDI) committee member (2022-present)
Aberdeen Clinical Academic Training programme co-depute lead (2023-present)
- External Memberships
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Member of NHS England Maternity Transformation Programme Personalisation and Choice working group (2022-present)
Member of the Chief Scientist Office clinical academic fellowship award committee (2022-present)
Member of the NIHR-funded STOPPIT-3 trial data monitoring committee (2022-present)
Member of the NIHR-funded PANDA trial steering committee (2022-present)
Member of the NIHR-funded LAMP data monitoring committee (2023-present)
Chair of the NIHR-funded PIONEER data monitoring committee (2023-present)
Member of the Public Health Scotland Perinatal and Infant Mental Health Evaluation advisory group (2022-present)
Faculty on the RCOG-affiliated ROBUST course (2016-present).
Member of the NICE antenatal care guideline committee (2018-2021).
Peer reviewer for scientific journals including New England Journal of Medicine, BMJ, PLoS Medicine.
Latest Publications
Models of care for pregnant women with multiple long-term conditions and the role of the midwife: A scoping review
Women and Birth, vol. 37, no. 5, 101645Contributions to Journals: Review articlesCesarean section at full dilatation in the first birth is not associated with an increased risk of subsequent miscarriage: a historical cohort study
Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica, vol. 103, no. 10, pp. 2092-2100Contributions to Journals: ArticlesIntroduction of the Mediterranean diet in pregnancy and the incidence of gestational diabetes mellitus: A systematic review of randomised controlled trials and meta-analysis
European Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology and Reproductive Biology, vol. 299, pp. 199-207Contributions to Journals: Review articlesLost in the system: responsibilisation and burden for women with multiple long-term health conditions during pregnancy
Health Expectations, vol. 27, no. 3, e14104Contributions to Journals: Articles- [ONLINE] DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/hex.14104
- [OPEN ACCESS] http://aura.abdn.ac.uk/bitstream/2164/23612/2/Hanley_etal_HE_Lost_In_The_VoR.pdf
- [ONLINE] View publication in Scopus
The implementation and impact of non-invasive prenatal testing (NIPT) for Down's syndrome into antenatal screening programmes: a systematic review and meta-analysis
PloS ONEContributions to Journals: Articles
Prizes and Awards
HDRUK Research Team Award - 2022. MuM-Predict consortium.
- Research
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Research Overview
Dr Black is an academic obstetrician at intermediate career stage. Her research focuses on informed supported decision-making and personalised planning of maternity care, optimising pregnancy experiences for birthing people, including those with multiple long-term health conditions and those with social disadvantage.
Dr Black strives to improve the safety of labour and birth, and to enhance the pregnancy and birthing experience for service users through improved engagement between maternity care professionals and those that they care for. She has a specific interest in how clinicians can support service users to make informed choices using evidence-based information and prediction tools. She has an ongoing interest in identifying the key outcomes of maternity research studies that matter to stakeholders.
Dr Black has a track-record of obtaining research funding, publishing in high-impact journals, coproduction and engaging with the public to ensure responsible dissemination of her research findings.
Research Areas
Applied Health Sciences
Research Specialisms
- Health Studies
- Epidemiology
Our research specialisms are based on the Higher Education Classification of Subjects (HECoS) which is HESA open data, published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence.
Current Research
Dr Black is chief investigator of an NIHR-funded study titled: Planning mode of birth in routine antenatal care: Development of a decision aid (Plan-A), 2022-2025. The study team includes a panel of public and third sector representatives, midwives, obstetricians, an NHS manager, and experts in qualitative research, social justice and implementation science.
Reflecting her interests in reducing inequalities and optimising outcomes of maternity care, Dr Black supervises a PhD project on how refugee women and those seeking asylum experience maternity care in Scotland. She also supervises a PhD project exploring the role of prediction tools in induction of labour and a further PhD project on how to optimise uptake of caesarean birth in Ghana.
Dr Black is working with UK collaborative groups on NIHR-funded research into outpatient induction of labour, epilepsy in pregnancy, patient safety and management of postpartum haemorrhage. She also collaborates on MRC-funded research into multiple long-term conditions in pregnancy.
Dr Black co-led a Public Health Scotland-funded study of the impact of changes in NHS Scotland maternity services on women and staff. Along with Dr Albert Farre at the University of Dundee they conducted a mixed-methods study to understand the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic-related changes in maternity care, and how these findings could shape future maternity care in Scotland. Their report will influence upcoming policy for maternity care in Scotland.
As part of her interest in understanding and reducing inequalities in health outcomes for pregnant women in the UK, Dr Black is supervising a number of student projects (from PhD to BSc level) which set out to increase knowledge of and improve healthcare and experiences for pregnant women from underserved communities.
Past Research
Dr Black has completed several studies of pregnancy and birth outcomes using routinely collected maternity data including the Aberdeen Maternity and Neonatal Databank and Scottish national data. Her work on offspring outcomes of planned caesarean birth (published in JAMA 2015, PLoS Medicine 2016 and Inflammatory Bowel Diseases 2014) has informed the 2021 updated NICE guideline on the topic.
Dr Black has led a series of systematic reviews of prediction models for birth complications - the first of these (published BJOG 2020) highlighted the key gaps in the existing research which have led to existing models not being used in practice.
Dr Black has led a systematic review of key outcomes of planned mode of birth (published EJOG 2021) which forms the basis of a core outcome set in development. The core outcome set will identify the important outcomes to report in future studies comparing planned vaginal and planned caesarean birth.
Previous work on clinical thresholds for caesarean birth (published in AOGS 2018) provided granular data on changes in clinical practice regarding threshold for intrapartum caesarean birth over time, which is of value to units striving to understand and safely influence intrapartum caesarean rates.
Knowledge Exchange
Oral presentations
- MUM-PREDICT Public webinar - Introduction to the findings of the MRC-funded consolidator grant to explore multimorbidity in pregnancy and future plans, February 2021
- ‘Caesarean Section through the ages: A North East perspective’. General public audience. British Science Week, Aberdeen, UK, March 2016
Writing for the public
- ‘Vaginal birth comes with risks too – so should it really be the default option?’ The Conversation. July 2016. https://theconversation.com/vaginal-birth-comes-with-risks-too-so-should-it-really-be-the-default-option-62855
- ‘How taking drugs while pregnant harms unborn babies’ The Conversation. November 2014 https://theconversation.com/how-taking-drugs-while-pregnant-harms-unborn-babies-33989
- ‘Understanding pregnancy’ Family Doctor Series, BMA publications. Primary author. 2014
Demonstrations
- Stall showcasing Aberdeen Maternity and Neonatal Databank May Festival 2015, 2017 University of Aberdeen, UK
Media relations
- Press release/media interviews in relation to published report on the impact of changes in NHS Scotland maternity services on women and staff (PHS website) 2022. Interviewed on BBC radio Scotland.
- Press release/media interviews in relation to published manuscript ‘Planned repeat caesarean section at term and adverse childhood health outcomes: a record-linkage study’ in PloS Medicine, 2016. Quoted in Time magazine, the Daily Mail and multiple online media outlets.
- Press release/factual document/media interviews in relation to published manuscript ‘Planned caesarean section at term and adverse childhood health outcomes’ published in JAMA 2015. Quoted in The Times, The New York Times, The Times India, The Scotsman, The Scottish Daily Mail, and The Sun. These documents largely led to balanced reporting of the study findings which were otherwise at high risk of being misreported.
- Interviewed for and quoted in Scotland on Sunday newspaper article on elective caesarean section in Scotland as an expert’ June 2015
Collaborations
Plan-A study. Planning mode of birth in routine antenatal care: Development of a decision aid. Partners include researchers at Cardiff University, The University of Warwick and National University of Ireland, the National Childbirth Trust and NHS Grampian.
MuM-PreDiCT Multimorbid Pregnancy: Determinants, Clusters, Consequences and Trajectories (MuM-PreDiCCT). Seven universities, NHS Trust and Patient/Pubic Partners: University of Birmingham (lead), University of Aberdeen, University of St Andrews, University of Manchester, Keele University, Queen's University Belfast, Swansea University, Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Trust.
Choice Study – Cervical Ripening at Home or In-Hospital – prospective cohort study and process evaluation (CHOICE Study) University of Edinburgh (lead), City University of London, University of Stirling, Imperial College London, University of Cambridge, King's College London, Cardiff University.
OBS UK is a UK-wide collaboration aiming to reduce postpartum haemorrhage and related blood transfusion in a randomised trial. The team includes Cardiff, Oxford and Keele University academics with 40 participating NHS sites.
Epi-safe is an NIHR-funded collaboration focused on improving outcomes for women (and babies) affected by maternal epilepsy in pregnancy. Led by University of Birmingham with Birmingham City university and University of Manchester collaborators.
Patient Safety Research Collaboration funded by NIHR and led by University of Birmingham.
EBLIA is an MRC-funded project led by University of Birmingham with partners in South Africa. Funding stream: Funding for early stage development of new healthcare interventions July 2023.
Perinatal experiences during the Covid-19 pandemic: a mixed methods study. University of Dundee.
Supervision
PhD Students
Improving maternity care experiences for pregnant women seeking asylum or with refugee status in Scotland. Heba Farajallah. University of Aberdeen. 2020-2025.
Multimorbidity in Pregnancy: Epidemiology, clustering, pharmacoepidemiology and core outcome set development. Dr Siang Ing Lee University of Birmingham. 2020-2023.
Funding and Grants
National Institute for Health and Care Research NIHR152057 – Clinical and cost-effectiveness of a maternity quality improvement programme to reduce excess bleeding and need for transfusion after childbirth: the Obstetric Bleeding Study UK (OBS UK) Stepped Wedge Cluster Randomised Trial. Co-investigator. £2.6M 2023-2027
National Institute for Health and Care Research Midlands Patient Safety Collaborative. Co-investigator. £3.6M 2023-2028
National Institute for Health and Care Research Optimising outcomes in pregnant women with epilepsy and their babies: Reducing maternal seizure risks and assessing long-term safety of antiepileptic drugs (EpiSafe). Co-investigator. 2023-2028. £2.6M
National Institute of Health and Care Research 'Planning mode of birth in routine antenatal care: development of a decision aid' October 2022-March 2025. Chief investigator. £973,032
Public Health Scotland 'Perinatal experiences during the Covid-19 pandemic: a mixed methods study' £62,187 October 2020-March 2021 Commissioned research. Co-chief investigator.
Medical Research Council 'Multimorbid Pregnancy: Determinants, Clusters, Consequences and Trajectories' (MuM-PreDiCCT) (MR/V005243/1) £99,598 June 2020-December 2020
National Institute for Health Research 'Cervical Ripening at Home or In-Hospital prospective cohort study and process evaluation' (CHOICE Study) £782,967 2019-2022 Co-applicant and CHOICE implementation lead
Wellcome Trust Institutional Strategic Support Fund ‘Shared decision-making in planning childbirth – Proposed multi-stakeholder research agenda-setting workshop’ £11,275 2019-2020 Sole applicant.
Glasgow Children's Hospital Charities 'Reproductive outcomes after a fully dilated caesarean section: is there a risk of preterm birth and late miscarriage?' £4998 2019-2020 Co-applicant.
NHS Grampian Endowments funding ‘Baby boxes and parental capabilities: developing a measure of social outcomes’ £10,427, 2019-2020. Co-applicant.
Medical Research Scotland Vacation scholarship (main applicant to propose supervision of medical student Miss Catriona Young). £1600, Summer 2019. Primary data analysis of impact of duration of second stage of labour on maternal and offspring outcomes.
MRC Proximity 2 Discovery University of Aberdeen ‘Supporting birth planning through personalised risk predictions’ 2018 £1200 Used to underpin current funding applications.
Medical Research Scotland Vacation scholarship (main applicant to propose supervision of medical student Miss Anna Rose). £1500, Summer 2016.
National Institute of Health Research ‘Offspring renal calculi following elective caesarean’ £11,595, 2017-2018
Wellbeing of Women Research scholarship (co-applicant as supervisor of Dr Andrea Woolner). £19,939, 2015-2018.
Wellcome Trust Research training fellowship (personal award). £225,190, 2013-2016. This award funded 36 months of full-time PhD-focused research.
- Teaching
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Teaching Responsibilities
Dr Black leads the MSc-level course in Evidence Based Health which is delivered fully online. This teaches the steps of conducting a systematic review and how to implement evidence-based healthcare in practice. The implementation modules include the process of supported decision-making with individuals through to influencing healthcare policy.
Dr Black delivers ethics-based teaching to year 4 MBchB students, while supporting the delivery of teaching on the reproductive system for year 3 MBchB students.
Non-course Teaching Responsibilities
Dr Black is regent to eight medical students.
- Publications
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Vaginal birth after caesarean section: why is uptake so low? Insights from a meta-ethnographic synthesis of women’s accounts of their birth choices
BMJ Open, vol. 6, no. 1, pp. 1-13Contributions to Journals: Articles- [ONLINE] DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2015-008881
- [OPEN ACCESS] http://aura.abdn.ac.uk/bitstream/2164/5434/1/BMJOpen2016.pdf
- [ONLINE] View publication in Scopus
Planned Cesarean Delivery at Term and Adverse Outcomes in Childhood Health
JAMA, vol. 314, no. 21, pp. 2271-2279Contributions to Journals: Articles- [ONLINE] DOI: https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2015.16176
Qualitative website analysis of information on birth after caesarean section
BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth, vol. 15, 180Contributions to Journals: ArticlesChildhood health problems following planned caesarean delivery at term: a population-based retrospective cohort study of Scottish data
BJOG-An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, vol. 122, pp. 4-4Contributions to Journals: AbstractsChildhood learning disability and cerebral palsy following planned caesarean delivery: a population-based retrospective cohort study of Scottish data
BJOG-An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, vol. 122, pp. 75-75Contributions to Journals: AbstractsHow taking drugs while pregnant harms unborn babies
The ConversationContributions to Specialist Publications: ArticlesInternet information on birth options after caesarean compared to the RCOG patient information leaflet: a web survey
BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth, vol. 14, 361Contributions to Journals: Articles- [ONLINE] DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2393-14-361
- [OPEN ACCESS] http://aura.abdn.ac.uk/bitstream/2164/4168/1/Publication_bias.pdf
Mode of Delivery and Risk of Inflammatory Bowel Disease in the Offspring: Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Observational Studies
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases, vol. 20, no. 7, pp. 1217–1226Contributions to Journals: Articles- [ONLINE] DOI: https://doi.org/10.1097/MIB.0000000000000075
A report from #BlueJC: Can measuring angiogenic factors help with predicting preterm pre-eclampsia in low-risk women?
BJOG-An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, vol. 121, no. 3, pp. 375Contributions to Journals: Articles- [ONLINE] DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/1471-0528.12639
Impact of loop electrosurgical excision procedure for cervical intraepithelial neoplasia on HIV-1 genital shedding: a prospective cohort study: population and statistical queries
BJOG-An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, vol. 121, no. 3, pp. 371Contributions to Journals: Articles- [ONLINE] DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/1471-0528.12519